Parenting

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Dad's Guide in Mom's Absence

When Mom goes away for the week, leaving a father of three in charge of the brood, dessert is breakfast, chaos is embraced, and Dad ends up getting some bona-fide bachelor time.

By Michael Paterniti

To the cunning husband, my wife's dinner might have suggested a special occasion: my favorite Époisses cheese followed by grilled monkfish with roasted brussels sprouts, all served with a crisp Sancerre. Sometime during dessert, after the kids had been released to the playroom, she mentioned that she had business on the West Coast the following month, and she and her girlfriends were talking about parlaying it into a college-roommate reunion. She was a bit hazy on details: exact number of days, spa treatments, etc. She asked it as a sort of offhand question: Would it be okay?

I—her well-fed male animal, swooning from a bellyful of good food and therefore irrationally happy—was full of accommodation. Whatever she had just said, I just agreed, without any reservation. I laid down my spoon and said: "Jeez, hon, you really don't have to ask." A one-night reunion with the gals just down the road, sometime in 2012? Could I handle our wonderful, docile kids? Oh, ha-ha-ha, by then they'd practically be taking care of themselves: Yes!

Related: Dealing with Tantrums

We ended the meal pleased, satiated. Washing the dishes, I went over and over the dinner in my mind: Was this our anniversary or something?

Thirty days passed, and she pulled out a suitcase from the closet and began to pack her favorite, most comfortable elf pajamas. And that's when it dawned on me, that thing she'd said at dinner and sort of reconfirmed one night while we were blearily watching The Office: She was going to be gone for eight days, the better part of two weekends and the five days in between known as the work week. I could hear our children somewhere in the house, playing peaceably. "When are you coming home, exactly?" I asked.

"Next Sunday night," she said. "Probably after you're all asleep."

Make that nine days.

Related: Dividing the Parenting Duties

That's when the involuntary twitch in my right eye started acting up, like the chief inspector's in the Pink Panther movies. "You said it'd be fine, right?" she said.

"Oh, yeah," I said. "It's just that ... I ... didn't ... you know ... remember." She gave me one of those gentle whose-fault-is-that? expressions, one of pity and perhaps slight pleasure. She had a sudden bounce in her step. Meanwhile, I had no bright ideas, no list of meals, no groceries even, no playdates or distractions on the agenda. I had visions of our three beautiful youngsters turning into little warmongering huns the minute she left, and then all coming down with the flu. One on three is still a mismatch in our house, especially when the lineup features our oldest son (age 9), a.k.a. the Verbalator, who's never met a gray area he hasn't exploited with the force of relentless speech; our daughter (age 6), a.k.a. the Emo-Bomb, capable of vast emotional destruction in only a second's time; and our youngest son (age 3), a.k.a. Stitches, often found launching himself from couches, stairs, and tables, and friend to emergency-room doctors everywhere.

What first flitted through my mind, as I stood there watching my wife zip up her suitcase, was self-pity: Why hast thou forsaken me? And then: Why couldn't thou be a little more like Pierre's wife? When she goes out of town, she leaves a precooked stack of meals in the freezer and a highly detailed itinerary of practices, lessons, and possible events and playdates, as well as prearranged baby­sitter blocks to give Pierre scheduled downtime. I believe she even includes his allotted martini on there, likely already mixed and chilled. So where was Pierre's wife now, in my hour of need?

Related: An Open Letter to You, The Bad Dad

Of course, every couple have their way of doing things, an allocation of chore-doing and breadwinning that finds its balance. Our brand of chaotic socialism consists of taking equal responsibility for everything, while splitting all chores more or less evenly. Everything rotates: I cook; she recycles; I do dump runs; she does dump runs. My wife travels a little bit for work, as do I. So even our single parenting evens out. Which is why she felt no compunction about not preparing for our week in her absence, just as I've never prepared for her week when I've gone out of town. Given that I should have been an old hand at this, then, why did it feel like the first time all over again?

But the pattern was familiar, with my panic slowly giving way to a sudden, very clear epiphany: Wait, said the brain's lightbulb, wasn't this actually going to be great? More room in the bed, no 5:30 a.m. alarm, no complaints about the volume at which I enjoy munching popcorn or cranking Lightnin' Hopkins's "Shaggy Dad" to start the day. As much as I love that person, my wife, it was possible we'd manage just fine without her for a week, right? With new sheriff Daddy calling the shots, we would dirty the house a little more, leave more dishes in the sink, stay in character as Jedi warriors for an entire Saturday, joyously eat meat without that one quietly reproachful plate of root vegetables. It meant a cornucopia of attention and hugs directed solely at me, the sheriff—and awe and respect for my all-powerful word when the Verbalator asked questions like, "Why are old people so weird?"

Short an actual blueprint like that constructed by Pierre's wife, I went to my playbook of strategies, one honed on the run, in a pinch, on the fly—an entirely improvisational, gunslinging construct I call the Game Plan. It begins with this dictate:

Continue reading the Dad Guide: When Mother is gone, Father shall say yes as often as possible...

More from Cookie:

Mom Confessions: "I'm Drowning in Debt"
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Postpartum Depression
Arguing in Front of the Kids
Pregnancy Weight Gain Guidelines
Kids and Video Game Addiction

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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 12
  • mommaofsun's Avatar
    Posted by mommaofsun Wed Jul 1, 2009 12:14pm PDT

    All I ask is that the kids are given real food to eat and have clean clothes.

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  • opiniononly's Avatar
    Posted by opiniononly Thu Jul 2, 2009 3:12am PDT

    Amusing article but the subtext can be interpreted as "mom's gone, dad's the bff instead of the parent for a week", which can be great fun for him and the kids but sets mom up for the next time he is traveling. I can imagine the conversations..."when you were gone, dad let us (fill in the blank)" Mom is the mean parent for enforcing normal house rules; dad is the fun one for tossing them out the window.

    I never could figure out why some parents seem to be afraid of spending solo time with their kids when the co-parent is gone. Or, I'm reading too much into it and everyone will have fun however it is defined. Either way, it's not my house, so to each their own :)

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  • Holly M's Avatar
    Posted by Holly M Thu Jul 2, 2009 6:19am PDT

    Opiniononly I totally agree! Once again its all up to the mom to be the good roll model, make sure the kids follow the rule, eat proper meals, and be the true adult.

    To each their own is right, but it is an interesting commentary on why our culture accepts that dad will be the playmate, and mom is to do the heavy lifting in the non-fun aspects of raising the kids.

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  • mommaofsun's Avatar
    Posted by mommaofsun Thu Jul 2, 2009 7:16am PDT

    What I can't stand is, when a time comes up that I want to go someplace, without the kids, I hear "Let him babysit". BABYSIT???? WTH is up with that??

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  • flame-n-heather's Avatar
    Posted by flame-n-heather Thu Jul 2, 2009 8:52am PDT

    Lol! This was funny! Totally fine with me too. The kids won't die from a week of relaxed rules. I bet they have a really good time bonding with Daddy too.

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  • Amanda's Avatar
    Posted by Amanda Thu Jul 2, 2009 1:06pm PDT

    I think this is great! Its ok to have relaxed rules every once and a while, this undoubtedly happens at my home when Im gone, and I can guaranty that it happens when my husband is gone. Being a military wife I have learned that when one parent is gone, for however long, it takes a toll on everyone, why not lift that toll a little by having fun. My kids don't focus so much on Daddy or Mommy being gone, they are more concerned with what they can get away with next. Now Im not saying that you should throw out all the rules, but a few here and there wont hurt anyone.

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  • MBT's Avatar
    Posted by MBT Thu Jul 2, 2009 2:14pm PDT

    Nice Article. Great upbeat writing!

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  • starfedra's Avatar
    Posted by starfedra Thu Jul 2, 2009 2:18pm PDT

    That was HILARIOUS..!!!! The Verbalator, Emo-Bomb and Stitches..!!! I have one of each my own that's probably why I found this article so funny, now I have nick names for my own angels, and well, have fun, I trust my husband if I leave the house for a few days and I already know what will go on, but well, that's his parenting, when mommy comes back they know everything will go back to normal.

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  • Melissa N's Avatar
    Posted by Melissa N Fri Jul 3, 2009 10:56pm PDT

    Opinionly, I happen to agree; how come dads get to be fun and not have to enforce the rules?

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  • Briana's Avatar
    Posted by Briana Sat Jul 4, 2009 1:06pm PDT

    I actually enjoyed the article. I am disturbed by the fact that some of you ladies didn't, and that the reason seems to be that "dads get to have all of the fun". I have two boys. When the oldest was a little guy, I worked a full-time job, with overtime, out of necessity. It was high pressure work, and I came home tired and a bit wrung-out. This wasn't a "career", mind you, something I was enjoying. Yes, I had my husband, my son's stepdad, and he worked really hard too. When I came home, I did my level best to enjoy my son. I played with him (action figures and tiny cars and the dreaded purple dinosaur). I have a ridiculous streak, and I would make up silly songs to amuse him while I cooked or cleaned. I read to him endlessly (the same books, over and over, who cares as long as HE loved them?) and watched the same dorky movies repeatedly. O, by the by, so did his stepdad. And I am not just a "fun" mommy. My oldest was a child, now an adult, with fairly serious behavioral and discipline issues, plus PDD/NOS and OCD. That he has never been in jail, or severely injured someone, can show affection and react appropriately in most social situations is due to diligence and consistent discipline on my part.

    Still, I love having fun with my kids. My younger son is approaching 12, and is a well-liked, polite, well-adjusted boy, as well as a gifted and talented student with a sly and sometimes outrageous sense of humor. He spends most of time with me, as I am now a SAHM (no my butt isn't a mile wide, I don't wear sweats, I don't gripe about my mate, and I don't scrapbook...apologies to those who do). I am THANKFUL to be able to be with my child. I enjoy it, it is NOT a chore, all yelling, and nagging and "don't put your feet on the couch" and "don't BUG me right now". He's a good human being, curious and surprisingly insightful, and he doesn't even think I'm an idiot. Yet. We still play with action figures too, and make up silly songs. We also talk about girls, and dating and everything under the sun.

    My husband and I both have fun, both enjoy our children, and both enforce the rules. Sometimes one or the other is present when an infraction occurs, and then that individual is responsible for consequences, sometimes a situation calls for discussion and joint decisions. Each of us has our own strengths and weaknesses and handles certain kinds of problems more efficiently. Each of us also enjoys different activities: my husband took my younger son to an at-home baseball game. Both loved it, but I would have been miserable, because crowds and loud noises bother me and I only enjoy baseball when I can watch replays. I take my son shopping, believe it or not. We laugh hysterically at ridiculous fashions, and he gives me advice (surprisingly accurate) on clothing choices, and sales girls flirt with him (he has these enormous bright blue eyes...). We all share a love of reading, animals, Discovery Channel and Animal Planet, a select few regular TV shows (only those with excellent character interaction and interesting plot-lines), and a somewhat bizarre sense of humor. And we all have fun.

    I read the comments of an awful lot of moms on Shine who seem to either dislike or resent their role as "mother", who openly declare that they find typical kid activities "boring" (such as reading the same book repeatedly), and who seem to terribly resent the fathers of their children, while also finding them completely incompetent and basically useless. I have come to absolutely loathe the phrases "mommy time" and "me time". I have been a full-time working mother. I have a very difficult "special needs" child, and another child who also requires attention, but who is "garden variety" and has suffered quite a bit because of his older brother's tendency toward bullying. My oldest child's father was irresponsible as a parent and partner, and contributed nothing but money (and precious little of that) toward our family. My current husband is his polar opposite, a dedicated spouse, friend, helpmate and father. Despite having ongoing emotional and psychiatric issues, I am a fully functioning wife, mother, lover and friend. Being a SAHM, I do NOT talk exclusively of day to day domestic drudgery, Martha Stewart madness, every detail of my children's every accomplishment and what a clueless boor my spouse is. I have little family here, just my lovely mom-in-law, and only two close friends, one of whom owns her own very time consuming business, and the other a recent cancer survivor with children and issues of her own. And yet I still manage to find time for myself, even during the dreaded summer vacation. Maybe this is because my needs are simple. When the boys were infants, rather than bother with a stroller, I packed them everywhere, taking long, long walks for relaxation and exercise. I read to them and played with them, and taught them to amuse themselves, without play pens or elaborate toys. Once they learned to play, I would put a variety of CD's on the stereo, and I would read. When they wanted my attention, they didn't have to scream or fuss, and they also learned what "just a minute" meant. I would attend to their needs, and mine as well. You realize that this sanctified "me time" does not have to be a multi-hour trip to the spa, or girls'-night-out, or mega-shopping-blow-out. You're intelligent women. Simplify. I assume (probably stupid of me, but here goes) that you are not all ignorant, immature teenagers who had NO idea what you were getting into when you had children. I would hazard a guess that you realize that said children are, in fact, small humans, and individuals, with needs, and personalities, and thoughts and feelings that are totally unique and possibly quite unlike your own. I would even imagine that you would instinctively know that they would need you, to set limits, to create boundaries, to arbitrate disputes and to entertain, comfort, cherish and love them even when you're exhausted, sick or unhappy. It's what moms do.

    And here's a clue for the clueless: dads can do it too, if you let them. Too many times I've read snarky articles on Shine and other sites in which self-righteous women contemptuously point out the devastating flaws in their SO's parenting. Like, o, not perfectly matching tops to bottoms while dressing a toddler, or worse, letting said toddler wear his/her outfit of choice. Not quite getting the diaper right. Chocolate cake and grapefruit juice for breakfast. Letting the dog lick the child's face (or vice versa). Or other similar deadly offenses. Look, ladies, my husband changed poopy diapers. Sometimes this was hilarious, as he kept up a running commentary to our son, acknowledging freely the degree of odor and other merits of the offering, while fending off our curious, questing baby's nimble little hands. Our child would giggle with great delight, and his daddy's occasional spot-on vulgarity has appeared to have no negative affects on him. Dad also changed the Diaper Genie when it was full, all the while making gagging and retching sounds and begging for a gas mask. He was also a champion at bathing puke covered toddlers (my oldest, who is his STEP-son, was an expert projectile hurler; he didn't have to be sick to barf, just a bit full), bandaging wounds (while querying the howling child as to whether he ought to call the EMT's), and rocking exhausted little guys to sleep. He also single-handedly punched out a talking Barney that in the middle of the night began to spontaneously make a weird, demented moaning noise best suited for something from beyond the grave. I have NEVER criticized his techniques, because they work, and he's a great daddy, and he doesn't gripe or complain. I know their are unwilling, lazy men out there, but, ladies, some of YOU don't sound so utterly awesome either. Why not try a little family discussion, without criticism, with allowances for different styles and personalities (not to mention gender based differences, admit it, they exist), and divide responsibilities? Then try enjoying your children, having fun with them, marveling at them a little, instead of seeing them as a burden. It couldn't hurt.

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